New EU Bonds Seen As Rival Benchmark To U.S. Treasuries...Maybe

 | Aug 04, 2020 10:08

The agreement of European Union leaders to issue €750 billion of bonds to help finance COVID-19 recovery has many investors and analysts salivating with anticipation. The first significant issuance of joint debt by the bloc has them proclaiming it a bond to compete with US Treasuries as a benchmark.

For these investors, it is only the beginning. Despite all the protestations about this being unique and temporary, EU leaders will find numerous excuses to tap markets now that the genie is out of the bottle. For the optimists, this heralds a transformation of capital markets.

h2 Toward A More Perfect Union Or Hardly A Safe Bet?/h2

The presumption is that EU bonds will unseat German bunds as the interest-rate benchmark for the euro, as the EU’s high rating (triple-A from Moody’s and Fitch, double-A from Standard and Poor’s) makes the securities a standard for comparison.

Maybe. Even though analysts calculate that the European Commission will issue nearly €200 billion in COVID bonds a year over three years starting in 2021, that falls short of Germany’s planned issue of nearly €220 billion this year. Germany, France, and Italy will all have more outstanding debt than the EU, even if you throw in borrowing by the European Stability Mechanism and the European Investment Bank.